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Glance: GOP bills aimed to offset spending cuts

Updated at: 02/23/2013 5:08 PM
By The Associated Press

The Republican-led House last year twice passed bills to replace automatic spending cuts now scheduled to go into effect March 1. The bills, first passed on May 10 and then in an updated version on Dec. 20, both advanced by narrow margins with no Democratic votes. They were never considered in the Senate and did not carry over to the new Congress.

The bills would have spared the Pentagon and certain domestic programs from cuts, now put at $85 billion over the last seven months of this budget year. That money would have been replaced by cuts and other savings from domestic programs totaling more than $300 billion over the next decade. They included no new tax revenues.

Republicans said their bills would eliminate bailouts, duplications, slush funds and fraud. Democrats said they would undermine social service programs that help the poor.

Among the principal provisions:

_Rule tightening that could reduce food stamp recipients, now about 47 million, by about 2 million, and shrink school lunch programs.

_Blocking illegal immigrants from claiming refundable tax credits of up to $1,000 a child.

_Cutting Social Service Block Grant programs, which Republicans say are duplicative, affecting programs such as Meals on Wheels for the elderly, child care and child abuse prevention.